Abstract

A system far from equilibrium is characterized by unconventional many-body dynamical effects, which can lead to anomalous density fluctuations and mass transport. Interestingly, these structural and dynamic features often emerge simultaneously in driven dissipative systems. Here we seek an origin of their co-existence by numerical simulations of a two-dimensional, driven system of inelastic particles without external damping terms. We reveal a causal link between superdiffusive transport and giant density fluctuations. The kinetic dissipation upon particle collisions depends on the relative velocity of colliding particles, and is responsible for the self-generated large-scale persistent directional motion of particles that underlies the link between structure and transport. This scenario is supported by a simple scaling argument.

Metadata

Authors/Creators:

Head, DA

Tanaka, H

Copyright, Publisher and Additional Information:

(c) 2010, Institute of Physics. This is an author produced version of a paper published in EPL. Uploaded in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy.